Digitizing Thousands of 35mm Slides for a Museum

As part of an initiative to preserve the visual history of Singerly Fire Company, I have been working with the department’s museum and archive committee to digitize the Bob Norman Collection. This sizable resource, containing over a half-century of fire service images, was added to the institutional repository by the company’s official fire photographer.

Fire Photographer Norman

Bob photographed calls while firefighters battled flames and worked other emergencies. Over the decades, his camera captured at least 10,000 images on 35mm slide film. Besides chronicling day-in and day-out activities, first responders used the action shots of firefighters for training, investigations, and public information. His comprehensive documentation is invaluable for anyone studying fire service history.

Bob Norman
Singerly Fire Company Photographer Bob Norman, Feb. 2020

Of course, this large body of material required developing a process to safeguard the Kodak film and establish the historical context around each image. As preservation was the first challenge, the archive decided to migrate the physical collection of the film to digital format for long-term preservation and access. Up to this point, slides were projected on a screen to a roomful of people, but soon the collection will be conveniently accessible to anyone studying the department’s history. 

Digital Conversion Project

To convert the film to a digital format, the fire department worked with O.K Video of Claymont, DE, a company capable of handling large-scale digital preservation projects. Now that the scanning is completed, we are moving into the documentation phase to record pertinent information for each shot and contextualize the moments in time that were captured. This involves the development of a plan to catalog and archive the massive volume of slides.

This conservation and curation project enhances access to this unique archive of visual material, which documents Singerly’s heritage over two centuries in each shot.  

digitize 35mm slides
David Klein of O.K. Video and Singerly Firefighter Bob McKinney examine 35mm slides from one of the trays as they prepare to digitize the film.

C&D Canal Talk

Harford Community College is offering a talk and continuing education course on the C&D Canal. Starting on May 5, 2022, at 1:30 p.m., it involves three sessions. The first is a classroom lecture and that is followed by two field trips to towns along the C&D Canal The course is presented by Mike Dixon.

The Chesapeake and Delaware Canal has fascinating stories to be told. Along the 14 miles of the nearly 200-year-old waterway, every town and village, every lock and bridge, and every camp spot used by Union soldiers during the Civil War contributed to the engaging narrative. Discover the role that mule-drawn barges, locks, steamboats, and changing methods of transportation played in the evolving history of the Canal and the region.

For additional information and registration click this link https://hccweb1.harford.edu/scheduleofc…/U_noncrweb.asp…

C&D Canal Talk
A talk and course on the C&D Canal.

Life in the Past Lane at Rodgers Tavern & Perryville

Topic:

Life in the Past Lane at Rodgers Tavern (2022 Rodgers Tavern Museum Virtual Spring Lecture)

Description:

“Life in the Past Lane” examines the role of Perryville and the Tavern as an important transportation hub, from the colonial era to the 20th Century. Join us in this engaging program as we journey into the past lane, examining the unique stories and characters of the Lower Susquehanna River, the local ferries, the old colonial road that still carries traffic past the Tavern, and the bridges. This presentation includes many seldom-seen photos, which will help us consider the role the tavern played in the development of the broader community. So be sure to join us as we consider important history in your neighborhood.

FREE LECTURE
ONLINE ONLY
Advanced Registration RequiredTime

Apr 23, 2022, 06:30 PM

Click here for registration

Rodgers Tavern in Perryville
Rodgers Tavern in Perryville on June 30, 2018

Remembering Japanese Internment

As today marks the 80th anniversary of the Feb. 19, 1942, presidential order authorizing the internment of Americans with Japanese ancestry, I recalled an April day in 2016 in Bridgeton, NJ. On that Wednesday as spring got underway, I spent a delightful morning talking with 92-year-old Frank Hitoshi Ono.

Talking with Frank H. Ono and Japanese Internment
Mr. Ono greeted me as I arrived at his home on a Wednesday in April 2016 (Photo: Dixon)

At the time I was doing some fieldwork related to developing a program for the Seabrook Educational and Cultural Center in Cumberland County, NJ. The Center presents the stories of relocated Japanese Americans, wartime refugees, and migrant laborers to the “largest vegetable factory on earth.” As part of the research, I met with a number of people including Mr. Ono.

When Japan bombed Pearl Harbor, Mr. Ono, 18, was living in San Pedro, CA, where his family had a tuna fishing business. Worried that people of Japanese ancestry would act as spies, the United States Government ordered about 120,000 people, mostly U.S. citizens, placed in internment camps.

This forced relocation included the Ono family, the teenage college student ending up at Camp Manzanar, CA. As the war dragged on, a large-scale commercial agricultural enterprise in South Jersey, Seabrook Farms, needed employees due to the wartime labor shortage. Consequently, about 2,500 residents of the relocation centers were permitted to come to the fields of Cumberland County to help harvest crops and support processing operations. Mr. Ono’s family was in that group.

18-year-old Frank Ono at the Manzanar Relocation Center. He was working as a mailman at the camp. (Source: Ono)

After the war, Mr. Ono got a job with a radio sales and service company in Bridgeton and within a couple of years, he established his own business in Millville, the Arrow Radio & TV Sales & Service Company. As television came in and tubes gave way to transistors and other things he kept up with the times. He operated the business for about 40 years, eventually selling it when he retired in 1985.

He had many talents and hobbies, but in retirement, he focused on educating people about this period of history, and he was deeply involved with the Seabrook Educational and Cultural Center.

I thoroughly enjoyed that spring morning six years ago and still recall his rich, vivid stories. I was fortunate to have met Mr. Ono, and have the opportunity to directly learn about a different time and place in our nation’s past. It’s an experience I will never forget so as my newsfeed alerted me to the 80th anniversary of Japanese Internment the conversation from some years earlier was still fresh in my mind. As Mr. Ono remarked, this is a story that more people need to know, and I was thankful that he shared the accounts and his photos with me.

Frank Hitoshi Ono, 97, of Bridgetown passed away on Sunday, September 5, 2021.

For More on Seabook Village and Japanese Internment See

A photo album of the visit with Mr. Ono on Facebook

For the history of Seabrook Village see this article on the Densho Encyclopedia.